tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8745689372214847173.post8719682359628158870..comments2017-09-26T01:01:11.606-07:00Comments on Future of Charity: The Tragic GapFuture of Charity Blognoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8745689372214847173.post-25137502460669301312017-07-02T14:29:44.738-07:002017-07-02T14:29:44.738-07:00Thank you so much!Thank you so much!drdestinyakhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13621848910439197827noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8745689372214847173.post-65989833464782976382017-06-30T13:34:18.653-07:002017-06-30T13:34:18.653-07:00Thank you Anne for sharing your story. My husband ...Thank you Anne for sharing your story. My husband has come to tghe aide if a jobless man he met on the street. Larry (my husband) shared a few job openings he had read about. The man called and set up an interview. The man showed up at our house...he had no transportation to the appointment. So Larry drove him to the appointment and gave him bus money to return home, telling him if he got the job, he would have to learn the bus route from Sayler Park to Price Hill. The man got the job, so he says. Larry hasn&#39;t seen him since, but thinks if him often. Put as Larry said, he helped all he could, the man, he hoped was following through. Standing in the gap is not easy, rewarding, or long lasting. But it is our only response to be Christ&#39;s hands and feet. Thanks Anne!vicki welshhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14059776030210086029noreply@blogger.com